Personally (if the world was perfect) The Rockbox team as well as dedicated
users would pool their resources and design our very own player and go into
business! loll!
rocker

----- Original Message -----
From: "Björn Stenberg" <bjorn_at_haxx.se>
To: "Rockbox development" <rockbox_at_cool.haxx.se>
Sent: Sunday, March 21, 2004 2:51 PM
Subject: Re: How to get them to manufacture for us: An idea and a draft

David H. Straayer wrote:
> I've done a (very crude) first draft of such an article, below.
> Let's pass it around and comment on it. I'll dredge through my
> old notes, and Google around to try to find placement for it.
>
> What do you think?

An interesting initiative. I think you should be wary about painting a too
rosy picture, however.

> An international team of open-source software writers has
> entirely re-written, from the "ground up",

> Here are some of the key advantages of this approach:
> 1. No software/firmware development costs. Obviously a big plus

This is only true if the device they make is an exact Archos clone, which is
unlikely. After all, the Archos design is pretty old by now. Most new
designs will want to use better components and perhaps different features.
These changes, whatever they are, need to be supported by the firmware.

A manufacturer can not depend on Rockbox, or any other voluntary team, to
write this for them, for free, on schedule. Open Source software is, by
definition, not written on schedule.

What Rockbox provides them with, rather, is an "mp3 player starting kit".
For a small price (their changes), they get a complete mp3 player firmware.
All they need to do is adapt some of the drivers to their hardware. (Which
of course they could do by contracting one or more Rockbox developer.) This
will cut down their firmware development cost greatly, but it won't
eliminate it.

I think it is important to stress the sharing part. The price they pay for
using our software is that we get all their modifications in return. This is
sometimes overlooked by companies who seem to view Open Source code as
freebies they can grab and use however they like.